Cleaning Your Handgun

I don’t know anyone who “loves” cleaning their handgun, but it is necessary task. In fact, many handgun owners spread unsupported statements to rationalize not cleaning their handguns when they should.

So when should you clean your handgun?

After every shooting session, whether you fired “1” round or you fired “1,000” rounds.

If you did not fire your handgun, but it was exposed to and compromised by the environment, check it.

This page was created to help make the task of cleaning your handgun a little easier. I’m at the range at least two days a week, I have been in this routine since 1999. Seldom do I actually shoot, I socialize with my friends who work there and occasionally I teach a handgun course. What I am witness to each week are people who have just purchased their first firearm or they just became firearm owners by way of a deceased spouse or parent. Most of them ask about cleaning it, they are usually referred to YouTube or GOOGLE University. I have heard that some ranges and firearm training schools will clean your firearm for a fee. I don’t know about this practice, I obtained my first firearm at age 7 years, I was taught to clean it the following day.

If you have suddenly become a handgun owner and are not confident with the instruction on YouTube or GOOGLE, then use the below form to reach out to me. If you have an old gun or one not fired in years, then reach out to me with the details. We will get the handgun up and running again. Give a verifiable name and phone number and I will call you back the same day. Will I charge you for this,,, NO.

I don’t keep emails, this form is only for contacting me.

In 2023, 58% of all gun-related deaths in the U.S. were suicides (27,300), while 38% were murders (17,927). The remaining gun deaths that year involved law enforcement (604), were accidental (463) or had undetermined circumstances (434), according to CDC data.
— Pew Research Center March 5th, 2025

“463” - How many deaths were from cleaning a firearm? Cleaning a handgun is not difficult, but it demands your full attention.

Keep your ammunition away from the cleaning table.

Tips On Handgun Cleaning

  • Handgun Cleaning in Broward

    Cleaning The Glock 19

    Here is a link to my YouTube video on cleaning a pistol, the handgun is a Glock Model 19. This video is not going to win me any awards, but it may give you a few options that might make cleaning your pistol a little easier.

  • Cleaning The Smith & Wesson Model 642

    Cleaning The Smith & Wesson Model 642

    Here is a link to my YouTube video on cleaning a revolver, the handgun is a Smith & Wesson Model 642. This video is not going to win me any awards, but it may give you a few options that might make cleaning your revolver a little easier.

Handgun Cleaning Carts

Handgun Cleaning Cart
Handgun Cleaning Cart

Carts are especially good for keeping your handgun cleaning supplies in one place, move them from room to room when you are finished. They are not as expensive as you might think, Harbor Freight is the place to go for an affordable cart.

Gun Oils, Lubricants and Cleaners

These are the items that I have used without issues and they keep my handguns in top shape.

(Click on the photo for product details)

Note:

Rig Gun Grease I use as a “storage” protectant. I coated a rifle with Rig, placed it in a “gun sock” and stored it in a closet for 5 years. When I took it out, it was in great condition, with no issues.

WD-40, the most controversial item for gun cleaning, gun owners hate it or love it, I happen to love it, use it properly.


Handgun Cleaning Kits


Handgun Cleaning Tools

(Click on the photo for product details)

Marsh Fountain Brush

I have used the Marsh Fountain Brush for over 30 years, I still use the same brush(not the one in the photos). It is the best system that I have ever used for lubricating and maintaining my firearms. The brush was designed for painters, but the military and large police departments fill it with lubricant and maintain their weapon inventory. It might take an experienced gun handler 20 minutes to lubricate his weapon with a cloth and bottle of lubricant, it takes me just over 2 minutes with the Marsh Fountain Brush. I apply teflon plumber’s tape to the brush head and bottom cap, as lubricants are usually a lot thinner than paint, this keeps any lubricant from leaking out.


One of the best assets and the cheapest tool for cleaning my handgun is a cake pan and a shammy (cloth). It keeps the mess contained and easy to clean up. Each Secamax Shammy cost $1.48 and can be cut into sections for at least “8” cleanings. The scrap trimmings from the Secamax make GREAT swabs for the bore cleaning.


Son, only a pimp in a Louisiana whore-house carries pearl-handled revolvers. These are ivory.
— General George S. Patton, Jr.